Bad at Sports Episode 534: Jitish Kallat - a podcast by Bad at Sports

from 2015-12-04T04:52:41

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This week, Mumbai-based artist Jitish Kallat returns to Bad at Sports, this time from San


Francisco, where he sits down with Patricia Maloney. Listeners may remember Kallat’s


first appearance on the podcast on the eve of the opening for his large-scale installation,


Public Notice 3 (2010-11), in the Fullerton Hall stairwell of the Art Institute of Chicago.


Kallat, one of the most prominent figures of contemporary Asian art, works across a


variety of media, including painting, sculpture, photography, installation, and video. He


was the curator for the Kochi-Muziris Biennale, India in 2014. This year, Kallat has had


several solo exhibitions, including Jitish Kallat: Public Notice 2, at the Art Gallery of


New South Wales in Sydney. His Paris exhibition, The Infinite Episode, opened at the


Galerie Templon in September 2015. Kallat's large permanent public sculpture unveiled


in Austria in October 2015. 


His solo exhibitions include Epilogue (2013-14) at the San Jose Museum of Art; Circa at


the Ian Potter Museum of Art, Melbourne, Australia (2012); Fieldnotes: Tomorrow was


here Yesterday at the Bhau Daji Lad Museum, Mumbai, India (2011); Likewise at Arndt,


Berlin, Germany (2010); The Astronomy of the Subway at Haunch of Venison, London,


UK (2010); Aquasaurus at the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation, Paddington,


Australia (2008) and Lonely Facts at the Kunsthalle Luckenwalde, Luckenwalde,


Germany (1998).


Kallat has participated in major exhibitions, including: India: Art Now at the Arken


Museum, Ishoj, Denmark (2012-13); Indian Highway IV at MAXXI, Rome, Italy (2012)


and at Musée d'art contemporain de Lyon, Lyon, France (2011); The Empire Strikes


Back: Indian Art Today at Saatchi Gallery, London, UK (2010); Chalo! India: A New Era


of Indian Art at Essl Museum – Contemporary Art, Klosterneuburg, Austria and at Mori


Art Museum, Tokyo (both 2009), as well as Indian Highway at the Serpentine Gallery,


London, UK (2008-09); Die Tropen. Ansichten von der Mitte der Weltkugel at Martin-


Gropius-Bau, Berlin, Germany (2008); Urban Manners at Hangar Bicocca, Milan, Italy


(2007) and Century City at Tate Modern, London, UK (2001).

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